Military seize airfield controlled by anti-govt activists in eastern Ukraine

Ukranian troops stand guard at a checkpoint near the city of Izium in the Kharkiv region of east Ukraine April 15, 2014. (Reuters / Maks Levin) / Reuters

Ukrainian troops have seized an airfield in the city of Kramatorsk as part of a security operation against anti-government activists in the eastern part of the country. Activists claimed several people were wounded.

Kramatorsk

Coup-imposed President Aleksandr Turchinov said that he received
a telephone call confirming that the military has seized the
airfield in Kramatorsk.

Ukrainian troops approached the military airfield in armored
personnel carriers between the eastern cities of Kramatorsk and
Slavyansk earlier on Tuesday, the people’s militia located at the
airfield told RIA Novosti over the phone.

“They started negotiating with the people’s militia, which is
in control of the airfield. The shooting started unexpectedly.
There are injured among the people’s militia, and there may be
deaths,” they said.

The activists who controlled the base said they were forced to
retreat. However, the city is still under the control of the
people’s militia, as they have blocked the entrance to Kramatorsk
and are ready to defend the city, the activists added.

“We were forced out of the airfield, but the city itself is
under our control, we won’t allow [the Ukrainian troops] to
enter,” one of the activists told Interfax.

“There are about 60 units of armored vehicles. They have been
preparing for several days, and now they started to storm [the
airfield]. The protesters blocked their way, they started
shooting, there are wounded. Our people retreated. There are
about 15 tanks, the other units are armored personnel
vehicles,” another member of the people’s militia told RIA
Novosti.

However, the aid to the head of Ukraine’s Ministry of Interior
Stanislav Rechinsky said there were no casualties. He did not
specify the number of captives, saying that “this information
will come in the upcoming days”

He added that special forces of the Interior Ministry Omega and
of SBU Alfa took part in the operation.
Planes and helicopters were mobilized during the raid to
“defend the machinery, as it was not known how the [security
operation] would end,” according to the Ukrainian army.

Videos of military jets and helicopters flying over Kramatorsk as
the attack was launched appeared on YouTube.

A RIA Novosti reporter on the scene said after the security
operation that at around 5 p.m. on Tuesday, hundreds of civilians
gathered at the airfield to negotiate with the troops. There were
about 50 military officers in black and green uniforms, the
reporter added.

The Ukrainian troops fired warning shots into the air to disperse
the civilians. In turn, the protesters started setting up
barricades.

A Ukrainian security authority who was appointed chief of the
security operation in eastern Ukraine said on Tuesday that all
activists who do not lay down their arms will be
"destroyed."

"They must be warned that if they do not lay down their arms,
they will be destroyed," Ukrainian Security Service (SBU)
General Vasily Krutov told reporters, as quoted by AFP.

Russian President Vladimir Putin urged the UN and the
international community to condemn Kiev’s
“unconstitutional” actions in eastern Ukraine, the
Kremlin’s press service said in a Tuesday statement.

Putin spoke on the phone with UN Chief Ban Ki-Moon and discussed
the escalating tensions which have been caused by Kiev’s security
operation.

"The Secretary-General...underlined that any deepening of the
crisis would be profoundly detrimental for all concerned; hence
the need for everyone to work to de-escalate the situation,"
Ban's press office said in a statement.

Slavyansk

Earlier on Tuesday, reports emerged that the eastern city of
Slavyansk was being raided by Ukrainian troops as part of the
security operation.

“Currently there is a major attack on Slavyansk, armored
personnel vehicles are entering the city...there are many troops.
The men are getting ready to defend [the city],” head of the
Donbass people’s militia, Sergey Tsyplakov, told RIA Novosti.

“There is a lot of military machinery here,” said one of
the activists. “But the shooting hasn’t started yet.”

RT Spanish correspondent Francisco Guaita, reporting from the
scene later in the day, said that Slavyansk is calm. According to
Guaita, the regional administration building and local police
station are still under the control of anti-government activists
and there are no Ukrainian military troops inside the city.

“There is no military machinery in Slavyansk, no troops,
though there are a lot of panicky reports in the media of tanks
moving [to the city], armored vehicles and so on,” said the
aid to the head of Ukraine’s Ministry of Interior Rechinsky.

RT’s Guaita also reported that hundreds of people were gathering
in the center of Slavyansk “to make it clear that they want a
referendum, they are not going to move from here...and they want
more sovereignty.”

Anti-government protesters have been holding rallies in the
southeastern part of the country following the coup in Kiev on
February 22. Activists have seized government buildings in most
of the cities in the Donetsk region.

On Sunday, the Kiev government launched a crackdown operation in
Slavyansk. Following the event, Ukraine’s Security Council
approved a full-scale security operation in the country’s eastern
regions. Moscow slammed Kiev’s order, saying it was
“criminal.”

On Monday, Turchinov signed a decree to officially begin a
“special anti-terrorist operation.”